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(Redirected from Old Croton Aqueduct ) Aqueduct in New York (1842–1955) For the current aqueduct which superseded this one, see New Croton Aqueduct . United States historic place Old Croton Aqueduct U.S. National Register of Historic Places U.S.
National Historic Landmark New York State Register of Historic Places The Croton Aqueduct at High Bridge in 1859 Location of Croton Aqueduct Nearest city New York City , New York Built 1837–1842 Architect John B. Jervis ; David Douglass; James
Renwick Jr. NRHP reference No. 74001324 NYSRHP No. 11912.000082 Significant dates Added to NRHP December 2, 1974 [ 1 ] Designated NHL April 27, 1992 [ 2 ] Designated NYSRHP June 23, 1980 The Croton Aqueduct or Old Croton Aqueduct was a large and
complex water distribution system constructed as part of the New York City water supply system between 1837 and 1842. The aqueducts , which were among the first in the United States , carried water by gravity 41 miles (66 km) from the Croton River in
Westchester County to reservoirs in Manhattan . It was built because local water resources had become polluted and inadequate for the growing population of New York City . Although the aqueduct was largely superseded by the New Croton Aqueduct ,
which was built in 1885-1890, the Old Croton Aqueduct remained in service until 1955. [ 3 ] Background [ edit ] The island of Manhattan , surrounded by brackish rivers, had a limited supply of freshwater available. It dwindled as the city grew
rapidly after the American Revolutionary War , and freshwater sources became polluted by effluent . Before the aqueduct was constructed, residents of New York obtained water from cisterns , wells, natural springs, and other bodies of water. Rapid
population growth in the 19th century and encroachment on these areas as Manhattan moved further north of Wall Street , led to the pollution of many local fresh water sources. Below Grand Street , a small number of well-off customers of the Manhattan
Company had fresh water delivered to them, but that company was actually more focused on banking—it eventually became Chase Manhattan —and only paid as much attention to its water activities as it needed to avoid losing the state charter that allowed
it to bank. [ 4 ] The poor and the rest of the city were forced to rely on well water, often made palatable by adding alcoholic spirits, prompting temperance campaigners to call for the municipal provision of water. The unsanitary conditions caused
an increase in disease. Epidemics of yellow fever ravaged the city. A polluted aquifer, overcrowded housing, the lack of sewers, public ignorance of basic sanitary conditions, and the existence of polluting industries near wells and residential areas
contributed to an unprecedented mortality rate of 2.6% (1 death per 39 inhabitants) in 1830. Then in 1832 cholera first reached New York in the deadliest epidemic to that date. The need for a new supply of fresh water was crucial. Construction [ edit
] Double Arch over Sing Sing Kill, Ossining , from a 1907 postcard; upper arch carries the aqueduct, the lower one carries a local street In March 1833, Major David Bates Douglass , engineering professor at West Point Military Academy , was appointed
to survey and estimate the proposed route. [ 5 ] : 46 In 1837, construction began on a massive engineering project, to divert water from sources upstate, following a route surveyed by Douglass [ 6 ] and supervised by Douglass' successor, Chief
Engineer John B. Jervis . [ 7 ] Jervis had exacting specifications for each segment of the route; he strictly guided progress and discouraged liquor consumption by workers anywhere near the construction sites. [ 8 ] The Croton River was dammed,
aqueducts were built, tunnels dug, piping laid, and reservoirs created. The gravity-fed aqueduct dropped 13 inches per mile, 1/4" per 100' (~0.02%). An elliptical tube, 8.5 feet (2.6m) high by 7.5 feet (2.3m) wide, of iron piping encased in brick
masonry was laid, sometimes in cuts. Conical ventilating towers, also called shafts, 10 to 20 feet high, were placed every mile or so to relieve pressure and keep the water fresh. [ 9 ] [ 10 ] Every third ventilator (e.g., #3, #6, #9) was built with
a door at the base to allow workers to enter the tunnel for maintenance. [ 11 ] Hydraulic cement was added where the aqueduct crossed rivers. It extended from the Old Croton Dam in northern Westchester County to the Harlem River , where it continued
over the High Bridge at 173rd Street and down the West Side of Manhattan and finally into a Receiving Reservoir located between 79th and 86th streets and Sixth and Seventh Avenues; the site is now the Great Lawn and Turtle Pond in Central Park . [ 12
] The Receiving Reservoir was a rectangular tank within fortress-like rusticated retaining walls, 1,826 feet (557 m) long and 836 feet (255 m) wide; it held up to 180 million US gallons (680,000 m 3 ) of water. 35 million US gallons (130,000 m 3 )
flowed into it daily from northern Westchester. From the Receiving Reservoir, water flowed down to the Croton Distributing Reservoir , better known simply as the Croton Reservoir , a similar fortified tank located on Fifth Avenue between 40th Street
and 42nd Street , where the New York Public Library Main Branch and Bryant Park are located today. This reservoir was built to resemble ancient Egyptian architecture . New Yorkers came uptown for the fine view of the city obtained from atop its
walls. Profile and ground plan of the lower part of Croton Aqueduct Operation [ edit ] Croton Distributing Reservoir (1842) Water started flowing through the aqueduct on June 22, 1842, taking 22 hours for gravity to take the water the 41 miles (66
km) (at a velocity of 1.86 miles per hour [2.99 km/h; 2.73 ft/s]) to reach Manhattan. [ 7 ] The Croton Aqueduct opened to public use with great fanfare on October 14, 1842. The day-long celebration culminated in a fountain of water that spouted to a
height of 50 feet (15 m) from the beautifully decorated cast iron Croton Fountain in City Hall Park . [ 13 ] The famous Bethesda Fountain in New York's Central Park , unveiled in 1873, is another tribute to the Croton Aqueduct. Even though only 6,175
houses had been connected to the system by 1844, the Croton water had already dramatically improved both domestic hygiene and interior design. Baths and running water were being built in the private homes of wealthy New Yorkers, and public bathing
facilities were constructed for the masses. The water system had another inadvertent consequence. The decline in the number of residents drawing water from the city's wells resulted in a rise in the water table, which flooded many cellars. To address
this problem, the city built sewers in many residential streets. By 1852, 148 miles (238 km) of sewers had already been constructed. About this time the German cockroach attracted attention and was called the "Croton bug" in the mistaken belief that
the aqueduct brought the insects into the homes being connected to the new water supply system. [ 14 ] Despite its size, the capacity of the Old Croton Aqueduct could not keep up with the growth of New York City, and construction on a New Croton
Aqueduct began in 1885 a few miles east. The new aqueduct, buried much deeper than the old one, went into service in 1890, with three times the capacity of the Old Croton Aqueduct. It currently supplies 10 percent of New York City's water. The Croton
Receiving Reservoir continued to supply New York City with drinking water until 1940, when Commissioner of Parks and Recreation Robert Moses ordered it drained and filled to create the Great Lawn and Turtle Pond in Central Park . The old aqueduct
remained in service until 1955. In 1987 the northernmost portion was reopened to provide water to Ossining . [ 15 ] Reused portions [ edit ] Old Croton Trail [ edit ] Old Croton Trail Length 26.2 mi (42.2 km) Location Westchester County, New York ,
U.S. Trailheads Van Cortlandt Park , New York Croton Gorge Park , New York Use Hiking , Biking , Jogging Difficulty Easy Season Year round Sights Lyndhurst Hazards Poison ivy , uneven grades, rough or muddy trail surface, at-grade road intersections.
The linear Old Croton Trail [ 16 ] extends for 26.2 miles (42.2 km) in Westchester County , providing public access along all but four segments—in the Getty Square neighborhood of downtown Yonkers , Tarrytown , Scarborough and Ossining —along the
route of the aqueduct. It crosses the lawn of the Lyndhurst estate, following the aqueduct's easement. The trail enters New York City on the eastern side of Van Cortlandt Park ; [ 7 ] the aqueduct runs through the Bronx under Aqueduct Walk and
alongside Aqueduct Avenue, and it continues under the southern part of University Avenue. 1887 engraving from Scientific American shows Old Croton Aqueduct in dotted line looking south from Putnam County . Croton Reservoir in foreground; Manhattan in
far background. Both the trail and the tunnel are part of the Old Croton Aqueduct State Historic Park , [ 17 ] which was created in 1968 and encompasses the northernmost 26 miles (42 km) of the aqueduct and its right-of-way , from Croton Gorge Park
to the Yonkers-New York City line. It lies wholly within Westchester County but is under the jurisdiction of the Taconic Region of the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation . [ 18 ] The trail runs roughly parallel to
Metro North's Hudson Line from northern Yonkers to Scarborough and is accessible from numerous stations on that line. The trail briefly parallels the Rockefeller State Park Preserve and its trails. Access to the trail is easiest where it crosses
Route 9 , known variously as Albany Post Road, Broadway, or Highland Avenue. Heading southbound into downtown Yonkers, the trail goes on-street at Bishop William J. Walls Place and N. Broadway, where it follows the sidewalk on N. Broadway for one
block, and then makes a left onto Ashburton Avenue going east. At Palisades Avenue, it makes a right and the trail bed restarts. Remnants of the aqueduct still exist and can be seen along the trail, [ 19 ] including 21 of the original 33 stone
ventilating towers (shafts), three stone weirs (chambers which were used to empty the aqueduct for maintenance), and one "Keeper's House" located in Dobbs Ferry . The locations of ventilating towers along the trail within the Old Croton Aqueduct
State Historic Park are: #1-#3 : near New Croton Dam (these are largely submerged or modified due to the construction of the dam) #4-#8 : Croton-on-Hudson to Ossining (some of them in wooded sections of the trail) #9 : Ossining (Spring & Everett St.;
one of the most notable, it is more ornate than others [ 20 ] and has the builder's name and year "1840" engraved on the base) #10-#12 : Ossining to Briarcliff Manor to Archville #13-#15 : Sleepy Hollow / Tarrytown (in residential areas near the
Rockefeller State Park Preserve ) #16-#17 : Tarrytown/ Irvington (between Lyndhurst and Sunnyside ) #18 : Irvington (notable for its distinct shape and colorful stone base) #19 : Dobbs Ferry (near the Keeper's House) #20-#21 : Hastings-on-Hudson (in
a wooded section of the trail) #22-#24 : Yonkers (including one near Untermyer Park and Gardens ) #25-#33 : The Bronx and Manhattan (all demolished as the city developed, though the site of #33 was rediscovered on St. Nicholas Avenue in Manhattan in
2011 [ 11 ] ) The hamlet of Archville along the aqueduct route was founded as a community of laborers building the Croton Aqueduct. It was named after an arched bridge that carried the aqueduct over the highway, present-day U.S. Route 9 . Built in
1839 and demolished in 1924 as a traffic hazard, the Archville Bridge is commemorated on two plaques on the western end of the pedestrian, trail-walking bridge that later replaced it. [ 21 ] South of Archville, the trail runs over the Mill River
Culvert, [ 22 ] which looks like a towering masonry wall. It is an 80-feet-high earthen and stone embankment designed to keep the aqueduct at a consistent, gentle slope (13 inches per mile) as it crosses the deep valley of the Pocantico River near
Sleepy Hollow Cemetery . The Keeper's House in Dobbs Ferry was built in 1857 and is the only remaining of four Keeper's Houses that is both on the aqueduct and open to the public. The only other remaining Keeper's House is located in Ossining, but it
was moved off the aqueduct, is privately owned, and is not open to visitors. [ 23 ] The portion of the Old Croton Aqueduct in Westchester County was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. When the aqueduct was listed as a National
Historic Landmark in 1992, the NRHP designation was extended to cover the aqueduct's route in the Bronx and in Highbridge Park , Manhattan. [ 2 ] [ 24 ] The Croton Water Supply System was also designated as a National Historic Civil Engineering
Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers in 1975. [ 25 ] The interior of the Old Croton Aqueduct has been documented by explorers including Miru Kim and historian Steve Duncan. [ 26 ] Aqueduct Walk [ edit ] Main article: Aqueduct Walk
Aqueduct Walk is a community park in the Bronx , New York City, running between Kingsbridge Road and Tremont Avenue . [ 27 ] Aqueduct Walk is designated as an official New York City scenic landmark . [ 28 ] [ 29 ] Gallery [ edit ] "Shutting off the
Croton", from Harper's Weekly (November 12, 1881) A weir in Sleepy Hollow . The weir chambers were used to empty the aqueduct for maintenance by diverting the waters to a nearby waterway. The line could be emptied in two hours. [ 30 ] Croton Walk,
south of Kingsbridge Road, Bronx 119th Street gatehouse , Manhattan 1857 Keeper's House in Dobbs Ferry ; open to the public. Inside the Old Croton Aqueduct at the weir in Ossining A section of aqueduct inside a viaduct with hydraulic cement lining A
section of aqueduct with brick walls and exposed ceiling A gate at Ossining Weir to close the aqueduct off for maintenance A valve at Ossining Weir to redirect water out of the aqueduct Ventilating tower No. 16, Irvington (May 2005) Ventilating tower
No. 15, Tarrytown (November 2020) Trail sign marking the Old Croton Aqueduct State Historic Park in Tarrytown Section of the Old Croton Aqueduct State Historic Park in Sleepy Hollow 135th St Croton Aqueduct Gatehouse in New York City is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places Plaque commemorating the Archville Bridge that carried the Croton Aqueduct over the highway Segment of the Old Croton Trail between Briarcliff Manor and Archville, one of the trail's wooded sections See also [
edit ] Croton Aqueduct Gate House List of National Historic Landmarks in New York National Register of Historic Places listings in northern Westchester County, New York National Register of Historic Places listings in southern Westchester County, New
York National Register of Historic Places listings in the Bronx Notes [ edit ] ^ "National Register Information System" . National Register of Historic Places . National Park Service . January 23, 2007. ^ a b "Croton Aqueduct (Old)" . National Park
Service . National Historic Landmark summary listing. September 17, 2007. Archived from the original on August 13, 2014. ^ Rennenkampf, Lenore (November 1973). National Register of Historic Places nomination, Old Croton Aqueduct . File Unit: National
Register of Historic Places and National Historic Landmarks Program Records: New York, 1964 - 2013. U.S. National Archives . Retrieved January 7, 2020 . ^ Burrows, Edwin G. and Wallace, Mike (1999). Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898 . New
York: Oxford University Press . ISBN 0-195-11634-8 . pp. 360, 362, 589 ^ "Van Cortlandt Park, Borough of the Bronx: Restoration Master Plan" (PDF) . New York City Parks Department , Storch Associates. 1986 . Retrieved January 8, 2017 . ^ A Trail
through History (Old Croton Aqueduct Staste Park brochure). ^ a b c "Old Croton Aqueduct Trail" . New York City Department of Parks and Recreation . Retrieved September 19, 2007 . ^ Nemo, Leslie (March 1, 2023). "Aqueduct met New York City's need for
clean water in 1842" . American Society of Civil Engineers . Archived from the original on March 22, 2025 . Retrieved December 19, 2025 . ^ "Important Elements / Empire City / History" . Friends of the Old Croton Aqueduct . Archived from the original
on January 17, 2025 . Retrieved December 19, 2025 . ^ "NPS Form: Croton Aqueduct" . NPGallery Digital Asset Management System . Archived from the original on September 20, 2021 . Retrieved December 18, 2025 . ^ a b "Location of Manhattan Ventilator
Discovered" . Friends of the Old Croton Aqueduct . January 7, 2011. Archived from the original on July 25, 2025 . Retrieved December 18, 2025 . ^ "Great Lawn" . Central Park Conservancy . Archived from the original on September 25, 2011 . Retrieved
October 6, 2011 . ^ Sward, Susan (November 25, 2010). "Fisherman's Wharf, Primed at Last for Makeover" . The New York Times . Retrieved February 6, 2026 . ^ Cockroach insect information & pictures . Retrieved November 29, 2006. ^ "An Engineering
Marvel" . Friends of the Old Croton Aqueduct . January 15, 2009. Archived from the original on February 23, 2016 . Retrieved April 14, 2026 . ^ "Old Croton Aqueduct State Historic Trail – Hike, Bike, Explore Westchester" . www.visitwestchesterny.com
. Retrieved December 19, 2025 . ^ "Old Croton Aqueduct State Historic Park" . New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation . Archived from the original on November 5, 2011 . Retrieved October 6, 2011 . ^ "History of the
Aqueduct Trail" . Friends of the Old Croton Aqueduct . Archived from the original on October 8, 2011 . Retrieved October 6, 2011 . ^ "Old Croton Aqueduct Trail Map" (PDF) . New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation .
Archived from the original (PDF) on December 31, 2019 . Retrieved January 23, 2026 . ^ "Record / Historic American Engineering / Old Croton Aqueduct, Ventilator Number 9, Spring & Everett Streets, Ossining, Westchester County, NY" . Library of
Congress . Retrieved December 19, 2025 . ^ "A Memoir of the Archville Bridge" . Friends of the Old Croton Aqueduct . January 8, 2011. Archived from the original on September 19, 2019 . Retrieved December 19, 2025 . ^ "GENERAL VIEW LOOKING EAST AT
MILL RIVER CULVERT - Old Croton Aqueduct, Mill River Culvert, U.S. Route 9 at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery" . Library of Congress . Retrieved January 6, 2026 . ^ "DEP Donates Century-Old Valve Actuator from New Croton Dam for Permanent Display at Education
Center" . New York City Department of Environmental Protection. December 9, 2015 . Retrieved April 2, 2016 . ^ Lange, Robie S. (October 1991). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Croton Aqueduct" . National Park Service. {{ cite
journal }} : Cite journal requires |journal= ( help ) and Accompanying 20 photos and drawings, from 1978 and 1843. (6.95 MB) ^ "Croton Water Supply System" . ASCE Metropolitan Section . Retrieved November 12, 2016 . ^ Gibberd, Ben (July 29, 2009).
"Children of Darkness" . The New York Times . Retrieved September 15, 2009 . ^ "Aqueduct Walk Highlights: NYC Parks" . www.nycgovparks.org . Retrieved June 8, 2022 . ^ Moloney, Síle (April 19, 2024). "LPC Designates Aqueduct Walk as Bronx's First
Scenic Landmark in Unanimous Vote" . Norwood News - Serving Norwood, Bedford Park, Fordham and University Heights . Retrieved April 20, 2024 . ^ Rose, Veronica (April 17, 2024). "Landmarks Designates the Old Croton Aqueduct Walk as the Bronx's First
Scenic Landmark" . CityLand . Retrieved April 20, 2024 . ^ Descriptive display at the weir chamber in Ossining, New York in the Old Croton Aqueduct State Historic Park. Accessed: September 6, 2010 References [ edit ] Chazin, Daniel D., ed. (2005).
New York Walk Book (7th ed.). New York-New Jersey Trail Conference. ISBN 978-1-880775-30-1 . Koeppel, Gerard T. (2000). Water for Gotham: A History . Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press . ISBN 0-691-01139-7 . Rappole, George H. (1978). "The
Old Croton Aqueduct". IA, The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology . Vol. 4, no. 1. pp. 15– 25. JSTOR 40967954 . External links [ edit ] Wikimedia Commons has media related to Croton Aqueduct . NYC GOV Water System History NYC GOV New
York City's Water Story [1] Archived 2018-12-02 at the Wayback Machine "How a Massive Public Works Project Saved a Parched New York," by SAM ROBERTS, New York Times, December 4, 2017 Old Croton Aqueduct State Historic Park Friends of the Old Croton
Aqueduct NYC Segment according to the NYC Department of Parks and Recreation ASCE History and Heritage of Civil Engineering - Croton Water Supply System "Croton Aqueduct" in 1902 Encyclopedia John B. Jervis Drawings Collection of the Jervis Public
Library on New York Heritage Digital Collections Account of the New York Guard protection of the aqueduct in World War I Archived November 29, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) documentation HAER No. NY-120, "
Old Croton Aqueduct, New York, New York County, NY ", 53 photos, 1 measured drawing, 185 data pages, 7 photo caption pages HAER No. NY-119, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Harlem River Crossing, Spanning Harlem River, Bronx, Bronx County, NY ", 13 photos, 2
data pages, 2 photo caption pages HAER No. NY-117, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Quarry Railroad Bridge, Aqueduct Lane at Williams Street, Hastings-on-Hudson, Westchester County, NY ", 3 photos, 2 data pages, 1 photo caption page HAER No. NY-110, " Old
Croton Aqueduct, Sing Sing Kill Bridge, Spanning Aqueduct Street & Broadway, Ossining, Westchester County, NY ", 18 photos, 4 measured drawings, 2 data pages, 2 photo caption pages HAER No. NY-112, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Mill River Culvert, U.S.
Route 9 at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Tarrytown, Westchester County, NY ", 7 photos, 1 color transparency, 3 measured drawings, 3 data pages, 2 photo caption pages HAER No. NY-113, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Mill River Waste Weir, U.S. Route 9 at Sleepy
Hollow Cemetery, Tarrytown, Westchester County, NY ", 5 photos, 3 measured drawings, 2 data pages, 1 photo caption page HAER No. NY-114, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Jewels Brook Culvert, Spanning Station Road, Irvington, Westchester County, NY ", 8
photos, 4 measured drawings, 2 data pages, 1 photo caption page HAER No. NY-115, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Overseer's House, Walnut Street, Dobbs Ferry, Westchester County, NY ", 2 measured drawings HAER No. NY-116, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Maintenance
Building, Walnut Street, Dobbs Ferry, Westchester County, NY ", 1 measured drawing HAER No. NY-118, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Saw Mill River Culvert, Spanning Nepperhan Avenue, Yonkers, Westchester County, NY ", 19 photos, 3 measured drawings, 5 data
pages, 2 photo caption pages HAER No. NY-207, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Ventilator No. 10, North of Scarborough Road, Briarcliff Manor, Westchester County, NY ", 1 photo, 1 photo caption page HAER No. NY-208, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Ventilator No. 18,
South of Main Street, Irvington, Westchester County, NY ", 1 photo, 1 photo caption page HAER No. NY-111, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Ventilator No. 9, Spring & Everett Streets, Ossining, Westchester County, NY ", 1 photo, 1 color transparency, 1 measured
drawing, 3 data pages, 2 photo caption pages HAER No. NY-109, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Northern Waste Weir, Snowden Avenue & Van Wick Street, Ossining, Westchester County, NY ", 4 photos, 2 measured drawings, 2 data pages, 1 photo caption page HAER No.
NY-108, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Indian Creek Culvert, Reservoir & Quaker Bridge Roads, Crotonville, Ossining, Westchester County, NY ", 5 photos, 3 measured drawings, 2 data pages, 1 photo caption page HAER No. NY-107, " Old Croton Aqueduct, Entrance
Entablature, New Croton Reservoir, Yorktown Heights, Westchester County, NY ", 1 photo, 1 measured drawing, 2 data pages, 1 photo caption page HAER No. NY-132, " New Croton Dam & Reservoir, Croton River, Croton-on-Hudson, Westchester County, NY ", 22
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Historic Places Portal v t e National Register of Historic Places in Manhattan Historic districts 322–344 East 69th Street Audubon Terrace Bowery Central Park West Charlton–King–Vandam Chelsea Chinatown and Little Italy East 73rd Street Fort Tryon
Park Fulton–Nassau Gramercy Park Greenwich Village Hamilton Heights Jumel Terrace Lower East Side MacDougal–Sullivan Gardens Manhattan Avenue–West 120th–123rd Streets Meatpacking District Mount Morris Park Residences at 5-15 West 54th Street St.
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Yacht Club Norwood Club Odd Fellows Hall The Players Racquet and Tennis Club Salmagundi Club University Club of New York University Settlement Society of New York Women's Liberation Center Women's National Republican Club Commercial buildings Office
buildings 1 Broadway 1 Hanover Square 1 Wall Street Court 108 Leonard 116 John Street 23 Wall Street 254–260 Canal Street 330 West 42nd Street 361 Broadway 40 Wall Street 48 Wall Street 488 Madison Avenue 49 Chambers 56 Pine Street 63 Wall Street 90
West Street American Radiator Building Bayard–Condict Building Bell Laboratories Building Broad Exchange Building Candler Building Cary Building Century Building Chamber of Commerce Building Chanin Building Chrysler Building Church Missions House
Corbin Building Daily News Building Decker Building Empire Building Empire State Building Equitable Building Film Center Building Flatiron Building Fred F. French Building General Electric Building House of the New York City Bar Association Lee,
Higginson & Company Bank Building Lever House Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower New York County Lawyers' Association Building New York Evening Post Building New York Life Building Old New York Evening Post Building Park Row Building Puck
Building Rockefeller Center Schermerhorn Row Block Scribner Building Seagram Building W New York Union Square Woolworth Building Drinking establishments Fraunces Tavern Julius Minton's Playhouse Stonewall Inn Stores, other commercial 170–176 John
Street 280 Broadway 287 Broadway 452 Fifth Avenue 55 Wall Street 75 Murray Street American Bank Note Company Building American Stock Exchange Building Apple Bank Building Bank of the Metropolis Barclay–Vesey Building Bowery Savings Bank Building
Chelsea Market David S. Brown Store De Vinne Press Building E. V. Haughwout Building Fleming Smith Warehouse Greenwich Savings Bank Building Kitchen, Montross & Wilcox Store Lincoln Building Macy's Herald Square Metropolitan Savings Bank Building
Mount Morris Bank Building New York Amsterdam News Building New York Savings Bank Building New York Stock Exchange Building Park and Tilford Building R. C. Williams Warehouse Robbins & Appleton Building Schermerhorn Building Sheffield Farms Stable
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Station James A. Farley Building Knickerbocker Station Lenox Hill Station Madison Square Station Old Chelsea Station Courthouse Appellate Division Courthouse of New York State Harlem Courthouse Surrogate's Courthouse Thurgood Marshall United States
Courthouse Tweed Courthouse Other governmental 1st Police Precinct Station House 240 Centre Street Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House Blackwell Island Light Block House New York City Hall City Pier A Federal Hall Federal Office Building Federal
Reserve Bank of New York Building Firehouse, Engine Company 31 Firehouse, Engine Company 33 and Ladder Company 9 Gracie Mansion Harlem Fire Watchtower Little Red Lighthouse Manhattan Municipal Building Municipal Asphalt Plant Hospital buildings City
Hospital Gouverneur Health Mount Sinai Morningside The Octagon R & S Building Smallpox Hospital Society for the Lying-In Hospital Strecker Memorial Laboratory Hotel buildings Barbizon 63 The Chatwal New York George Washington Hotel Gilsey House Grand
Hotel Hotel Albert Hotel Chelsea Hotel Gerard Hotel Seville NoMad Hotel Theresa The Knickerbocker Hotel Martinique Hotel Plaza Hotel Times Square Hotel Webster Hotel Westchester House Military facilities 69th Regiment Armory 369th Regiment Armory
Castle Clinton Castle Williams First Battery Armory Fort Jay Fort Washington Avenue Armory Park Avenue Armory Fort Washington Museums and memorials American Museum of Natural History Castle Clinton Castle Williams Dyckman House Eldridge Street
Synagogue Federal Hall Fraunces Tavern Gracie Mansion Grant's Tomb Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Hamilton Grange National Memorial Hispanic Society of America Lower East Side Tenement Museum Merchant's House Museum Morgan Library & Museum Morris–Jumel
Mansion Mount Vernon Hotel Museum Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site South Street Seaport Statue of Liberty The Met Fifth Avenue Whitney Museum of American Art Parks and recreation Asser Levy Recreation Center Bowling Green Bryant
Park Central Park Duffy Square Fort Tryon Park Governors Island National Monument Greenacre Park Marcus Garvey Park Riverside Park Statue of Liberty National Monument Union Square Verdi Square Giuseppe Verdi Monument Religious buildings Churches
Chapel of the Good Shepherd Church of Notre Dame Church of St. Ignatius Loyola Church of St. Mary the Virgin Church of St. Vincent Ferrer Church of Sweden in New York Church of the Ascension, Episcopal Church of the Heavenly Rest Church of the Holy
Apostles Church of the Holy Communion and Buildings Church of the Immaculate Conception and Clergy Houses Church of the Incarnation, Episcopal Church of the Intercession Church of the Transfiguration, Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration, Roman
Catholic Eleventh Street Methodist Episcopal Chapel Elmendorf Reformed Church First Hungarian Reformed Church of New York First Roumanian-American Congregation Fort Washington Presbyterian Church German Evangelical Lutheran Church of St. Mark Grace
Church Holy Trinity Church Holyrood Episcopal Church John Street Methodist Church Judson Memorial Church Marble Collegiate Church Mariner's Temple Metropolitan Baptist Church Riverside Church Saint Luke's Lutheran Church Saint Thomas Church Sea and
Land Church Second Church of Christ, Scientist St. Andrew's Episcopal Church St. Augustine's Church St. Bartholomew's Episcopal Church St. Cecilia Church and Convent St. George's Episcopal Church St. Ignatius of Antioch Church St. James Roman
Catholic Church St. Jean Baptiste Roman Catholic Church St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery St. Michael's Episcopal Church St. Patrick's Cathedral St. Patrick's Old Cathedral St. Paul the Apostle Church St. Paul's Chapel St. Peter's Church St. Peter's
Lutheran Church St. Philip's Episcopal Church Trinity Chapel Complex Trinity Church Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church of Manhattan West End Collegiate Church Zion-St. Mark's Evangelical Lutheran Church Synagogues The Actors' Temple B'nai Jeshurun
Beth Hamedrash Hagodol Bialystoker Synagogue Central Synagogue Congregation Ohab Zedek Eldridge Street Synagogue Hebrew Tabernacle of Washington Heights Kehila Kedosha Janina Old Broadway Synagogue Park East Synagogue Ramath Orah Stanton Street
Synagogue Temple Israel of the City of New York Residential buildings Houses 20 West 16th Street 51 Market Street 83 and 85 Sullivan Street 131 Charles Street 146 East 38th Street 203 East 29th Street 203 Prince Street 311 and 313 East 58th Street
326, 328, and 330 East 18th Street 437–459 West 24th Street 647 Fifth Avenue Adelaide L. T. Douglas House Admiral's House Alfred E. Smith House Andrew Carnegie Mansion Benjamin N. Duke House Blackwell House Cartier Building Charlie Parker Residence
Chester A. Arthur Home Daniel LeRoy House Duke Ellington House Dyckman House East 80th Street Houses Edward Mooney House Felix M. Warburg House General Winfield Scott House George F. Baker Jr. Houses Gertrude Rhinelander Waldo House Governor's House
Gracie Mansion Hamilton Fish House Hamilton Grange National Memorial Harry F. Sinclair House Henry Clay Frick House Houses at 157–165 East 78th Street Houses at 208–218 East 78th Street Isaac L. Rice Mansion Isaac T. Hopper House James A. Burden
House James B. Duke House James Bailey House James Brown House James F. D. Lanier Residence James Watson House Joseph Raphael De Lamar House Langston Hughes House Lescaze House Lewis G. Morris House Lucy Drexel Dahlgren House Margaret Sanger Clinic
Merchant's House Museum Morris–Jumel Mansion Mrs. Graham Fair Vanderbilt House New York Amsterdam News Building Otto H. Kahn House Park Avenue Houses Pomander Walk Samuel J. Tilden House Samuel Tredwell Skidmore House Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial
House Schinasi Mansion St. Mark's Historic District Stephen Van Rensselaer House Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site Villard Houses Will Marion Cook House William Goadby Loew House William H. Moore House Apartments, other residential
1 Wall Street Court 21 West Street 45 East 66th Street 49 Chambers 88 Greenwich Street 90 West Street 108 Leonard 240 Central Park South 240 Centre Street 287 Broadway 555 Edgecombe Avenue 1261 Madison Avenue Alwyn Court American Thread Building
Association Residence Nursing Home Bank of the Metropolis Barbizon 63 Barclay–Vesey Building Bethune Gardens Brooks and Hewitt Halls Cherokee Apartments Christodora House Colonnade Row Dunbar Apartments First Houses Fleming Smith Warehouse Gaylord
White Houses Harlem River Houses Harlem YMCA Hudson View Gardens International House of New York Ivey Delph Apartments James Weldon Johnson Residence Liberty Tower Lower East Side Tenement Museum Master Apartments Metro North Plaza New York Cancer
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Wavertree Yankee Others Battery Maritime Building City Pier A Pier 57 Others Columbus Monument Croton Aqueduct Croton Aqueduct Gate House Space Shuttle Enterprise Former Florence Mills House See also: National Register of Historic Places listings in
Manhattan ( Islands , Below 14th St. , 14th–59th Sts. , 59th–110th Sts. , Above 110th St. ) and List of National Historic Landmarks in New York City Note: National Historic Landmarks are not listed separately. v t e National Register of Historic
Places in the Bronx Historic districts Fort Schuyler Grand Concourse Historic District Jerome Park Reservoir Longwood Historic District Morris High School Historic District Mott Haven Historic District Historic properties Houses 175 Belden Street
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Episcopal Church and Parish House St. Peter's Church, Chapel and Cemetery Complex St. Stephen's Methodist Church Tremont Baptist Church Subway stations Jackson Avenue Morris Park Mott Avenue Control House New York, Westchester and Boston Railroad
Administration Building Pelham Parkway Prospect Avenue Simpson Street Van Cortlandt Park–242nd Street Westchester Square–East Tremont Avenue Woodlawn Other structures 48th Police Precinct Station 52nd Police Precinct Station House and Stable 1100
Grand Concourse Bronx Borough Courthouse Bronx County Courthouse Bronx General Post Office Bronx River Parkway Casa Amadeo, antigua Casa Hernandez Concourse Yard Crotona Park Dollar Savings Bank (Third Avenue) Dollar Savings Bank (Grand Concourse)
Edenwald Houses Fonthill Castle and the Administration Building of the College of Mount St. Vincent Hertlein and Schlatter Silk Trimmings Factory High Bridge High Pumping Station Kingsbridge Armory Morrisania Post Office Park Plaza Apartments Port
Morris Ferry Bridges Public School 11 Public School 15 Public School 17 Rainey Memorial Gates C. Rieger's Sons Factory Riverdale Monument Washington Bridge Wave Hill Williamsbridge Oval National Historic Landmarks Admiral David Glasgow Farragut
Gravesite Bartow–Pell Mansion Croton Aqueduct Aqueduct Walk Lorillard Snuff Mill New York Botanical Garden Enid A. Haupt Conservatory Lorillard Snuff Mill LuEsther T. Mertz Library United Workers Cooperatives University Heights Campus Gould Memorial
Library Hall of Fame for Great Americans Van Cortlandt House Woodlawn Cemetery See also: National Register of Historic Places listings in the Bronx and List of National Historic Landmarks in New York City v t e Protected areas of New York Federal
National Estuarine Research Reserves Hudson River National Forests Finger Lakes National Historic Sites and Historical Parks Eleanor Roosevelt Harriet Tubman Home of Franklin D. Roosevelt Kate Mullany House Lower East Side Tenement Martin Van Buren
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River Other National Historic Landmarks ( New York City ) National Natural Landmarks National Register of Historic Places Wilderness Areas State parks Allen H. Treman Allegany Amherst Amsterdam Beach Battle Island Bayard Cutting Arboretum Bayswater
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Caleb Smith Camp Hero Canandaigua Lake Canoe-Picnic Point Captree Catharine Valley Trail Caumsett Cayuga Lake Cedar Island Cedar Point Chenango Valley Cherry Plain Chimney Bluffs Chittenango Falls Clarence Fahnestock Clark Reservation Clay Pit Ponds
Cold Spring Harbor Coles Creek Conesus Lake Connetquot River Crab Island Croil Island Cumberland Bay Darien Lakes De Veaux Woods Deans Cove Delta Lake Devil's Hole Dewolf Point Donald J. Trump Earl W. Brydges Artpark Eel Weir Empire – Fulton Ferry
Evangola Fair Haven Beach Fillmore Glen Fort Niagara Four Mile Creek Franklin D. Roosevelt Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedoms Franny Reese Frenchman Island Galop Island Gantry Plaza Genesee Valley Greenway Gilbert Lake Gilgo Glimmerglass Golden Hill
Goosepond Mountain Grafton Lakes Grass Point Green Lakes Hallock Hamlin Beach Harriet Hollister Spencer Harriman Hart's Brook Haverstraw Beach Heckscher Helen L. McNitt Hempstead Lake High Tor Highland Lakes Higley Flow Hither Hills Honeoye Hook
Mountain Hudson Highlands Hudson River Hudson River Islands Hunts Pond Iona Island Irondequoit Bay Jacques Cartier James Baird John Boyd Thacher Jones Beach Joseph Davis Keewaydin Keuka Lake Knox Farm Kring Point Lake Erie Lake Lauderdale Lake
Superior Lake Taghkanic Lakeside Beach Letchworth Lock 32 Lodi Point Long Point – Finger Lakes Long Point – Thousand Islands Long Point on Lake Chautauqua Macomb Reservation Margaret Lewis Norrie Mark Twain Marsha P. Johnson Mary Island Max V. Shaul
Mexico Point Midway Mine Kill Minnewaska Mohawk River Montauk Downs Montauk Point Moreau Lake Napeague Newtown Battlefield Niagara Falls Nissequogue River Nyack Beach Oak Orchard Ogden Mills & Ruth Livingston Mills Old Croton Aqueduct Old Erie Canal
Oquaga Creek Orient Beach Peebles Island Pinnacle Pixley Falls Point Au Roche Reservoir Riverbank Robert G. Wehle Robert H. Treman Robert Moses – Long Island Robert Moses – Thousand Islands Robert V. Riddell Roberto Clemente Rock Island Lighthouse
Rockefeller Rockland Lake Sampson Sandy Island Beach Saratoga Lake Saratoga Spa Schodack Island Schunemunk Mountain Selkirk Shores Seneca Lake Shadmoor Shirley Chisholm Silver Lake Sonnenberg Gardens Sojourner Truth Southwick Beach St. Lawrence State
Park at the Fair Sterling Forest Steuben Memorial Stony Brook Storm King Strawberry Island Sunken Meadow Taconic Tallman Mountain Taughannock Falls Thompson's Lake Trail View Two Rivers Valley Stream Verona Beach Walkway over the Hudson Waterson
Point Watkins Glen Wellesley Island Westcott Beach Whetstone Gulf Whirlpool Wildwood Wilson-Tuscarora Wonder Lake Woodlawn Beach State historic sites Bennington Battlefield Caumsett Clermont Clinton House Crown Point Darwin D. Martin House Fort
Crailo Fort Montgomery Fort Ontario Ganondagan Grant Cottage Herkimer Home Hyde Hall John Brown Farm John Burroughs Memorial (Woodchuck Lodge) John Hay Homestead Johnson Hall Knox's Headquarters Lorenzo New Windsor Cantonment Olana Old Croton
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Lisha Kill Long Island Center for Conservation Long Pond Lordsland Lower Poultney River and Saddles Marrion Yarrow Mashomack Mianus River Gorge Mildred E. Grierson Memorial Moccasin Kill Montauk Mountain Moss Lake Mount Holly Nellie Hill Neversink
O.D. von Engeln Otter Creek Pawling Peconic Estuary Big Woods Pine Neck Roger Perry Memorial Ruth Wales Schunemunk Mountain Shadmoor Silver Lake Bog Spring Pond Bog Stewart Lewis A. Swyer Thompson Pond and Stissing Mountain Uplands Farm West Branch
Whitbeck Memorial Grove Other preserves Angle Fly Baxter Bergen-Byron Swamp Black Rock Forest Brandreth Park Cornell Botanic Gardens Ferncliff Forest Great Camp Sagamore James Lime Hollow Louis Calder Center Louis C. Clark Sanctuary Mohonk Peabody
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